Home | Fedora Core 4 Tutorial | Linux Tutorials | Linux Games | Linux Java | Linux Kernal | Linux Firewall | Linux Database | Linux Distributions | Linux Firewall GUI | Linux Distributions | Linux Firewall

 


 

Search Host

Monthly Fee($)
Disk Space (MB)
Register With us for Newsletter!
Visit Forum! Post Questions!
Jobs At RoseIndia.net!

Have tutorials?
Add your tutorial to our Java Resource and get tons of hits.

We offer free hosting for your tutorials. and exposure for thousands of readers. drop a mail
roseindia_net@yahoo.com
 
   

Tutorials

Java Server Pages

JAXB

Java Beans

JDBC

MySQL

Java Servlets

Struts

Bioinformatics

Java Code Examples

Interview Questions

 
Join For Newsletter

Powered by groups.yahoo.com
Visit Group! Post Questions!

Web Promotion

Web Submission

Submit Sites

Manual Submission?

Web Promotion Guide

Hosting Companies

Web Hosting Guide

Web Hosting

Linux

Beginner Guide to Linux Server

Linux Distribution

Major Linux Distribution

Linux FTP Software

Frameworks

Persistence Framework

Web Frameworks

Free EAI Tools

Web Servers

Aspect Oriented Programming

Free Proxy Servers

Softwares

Adware & Spyware Remover

Open Source Softwares

13. Reboot and test

At this point you should reboot your machine. When your system comes back up (assuming of course that everything went well and you still have a system), check to see what kernel you're running with uname -a. It should show you the one you just built. You also need to make sure the correct patch was installed. You can do that with dmesg | grep ACPI.*Subsystem\ revision . It should give the output: ACPI: Subsystem revision 20021212. The revision is the date the patch was released. This number will be different than mine if you are not using the 2.4.20 kernel. To look at all ACPI-related bits that were loaded/started when your system rebooted, do this: dmesg | grep ACPI . dmesg prints your boot messages and grep ACPI makes sure that only ACPI-related messages are printed.

You can also check to see what version you're using with cat /proc/acpi/info. Don't believe everything you read though. My output says that S3 is a supported state, but we already know it's not. It does give the correct version though, which is useful.

Search Tutorials

Linux Distributions

Fedora

Slackware
SuSe
Mandrake
Knoppix
Mepis
Debian
All Distors....
 

 

 

Send your comments, Suggestions or Queries regarding this site at roseindia_net@yahoo.com.

Copyright © 2004. All rights reserved.